DAY 48, July 8, Monday
Though I smelled a little smoke before going to bed last night, it wasn’t bad, and today started even better, almost clear and smoke-free. But it wasn’t to last. We pulled out from our improvised and pleasant campsite about 9:30 after a cold breakfast plus Val’s coffee. We continued north about 60 miles to Delta Junction, the tour bus stop that got me to thinking what a tourist was, and also the end point (heading north) of the Alcan Highway, which is presumably why it is a tour stop. We had technology—the term I will use going forward by which I mean cell signal and wi-fi—for the hour or so we were there. So it was north to Delta Junction and then back on the Alcan heading southeast toward Canada.
For most of the day the roads were wicked and the smoke became increasingly evil: the roads because of bumpiness, frost heaves, and a few gravel and dirt washboard sections, the smoke because it became thicker, a wee bit unpleasant to nose and eyes, and far more visible. It was greyish blue and suffused the entire landscape, settling over the trees, obscuring mountains only a few miles away, hazing over the sun. At one point we saw a couple of small fires only a few feet off the road. Psychologically, it affected us by urging us onward, not out of urgency but a simple desire to leave this behind, as it completely eclipsed the normal appeal of the scenery. We sympathized with oncoming RVs for whom this smoke might last their entire vacation in Alaska. But even without the smoke, it would be disingenuous to imply that Alaska is all beautiful scenery, extraordinary wildlife (in fact we did see a moose and her calf cross the road in front of us today), home of the most majestic of North American mountains, an outdoorsman’s paradise, and in general Eden before the Fall. The forty-ninth state is also often dusty and gritty, with tiny, not-so-quaint places you’re ready to move out of even before you’re 18, or at least so says an outsider. Like all other states, there is some obvious poverty. Aesthetically-challenged buildings, villages, and towns are common. The grit factor, in both the positive and negative connotations of the word, is high.
We went through Customs and entered Canada. Smoke doesn’t know national borders and there are also major fires in the Yukon. We may have this for several more days down the Alcan, but our thinking is that we might as well have some big travel days if the alternative is unpleasant camping caused by smoke. We covered about 320 miles over nine hours, rarely even getting to 60 mph. We found Lake Creek Government park for dry camping where sites are well spaced, vault toilets are clean, and the forest is all around. The $12 per night park is generally what I think camper-type camping (as opposed to, say, backpacking) should be. Apparently the mosquitoes think so too, and they have invited all their friends and some of their relatives to a park where they brag that housing prices are low, two-legged wild game is abundant, and it’s a nice place to raise a family.
DAY 49, July 9, Tuesday
Got up to a nice morning and the smoke seems to have somewhat abated. But enough about smoke.
I cooked pancakes outside on the Coleman stove though I could have done so on the inside stove. But it’s less cramped outside and I always make a mess that is easier to clean up outside. The pancakes were quite tasty, and the few dozen mosquitoes that fell in the batter as I slapped them added just the right meaty flavor.
Our goal was a little campground we had seen on the way up about 100 miles past Whitehorse, Yukon, and 350 miles from our start this morning. Val and I both are ready to get on to our bigger goals, beginning with Jasper NP and then on to Glacier and Kalispell—hence the second day of long driving. The road was noticeably better, and the comparatively fewer bad places were usually marked with either flags or signs. Traffic was quite light; you could go a couple of miles without seeing other vehicles, and I went 65 miles before I was passed. This might not be so surprising except for the fact that the surest sign of aging is starting to think that speed limits are actually fairly reasonable, and if anything I am beginning to think that some of them up here, at least in Alaska, were too fast.
So we set our sights for Dawson Peaks Campground. Val called, got a message saying they had vacancies, and we hoped for a return call and ultimately a nice campground with a dump station, hook-up, and a good meal in the advertised restaurant. Hope springs eternal in the human breast, but alas, we arrived at a campground with other campers but no restaurant, laundry, showers, decent bathrooms, dump station, or wi-fi—in fact, no employees. It was like a government, or provincial, park, except that it did have sites with electric and water hook-up, while the provincial parks have (so far) clean vault toilets and free firewood but no hook-up or other amenities at all. But both the government parks and this park are nicely nestled among trees and the campsites are sufficiently separated. Since there are no employees, this is the first private campground depending on the honor system for payment in slotted locked boxes as the government parks do. We figured we could go another day without replenishing our water tank since it’s currently a third full, and the temperature is pleasantly cool so we opted for a third night of $10 dry camping. We cooked soup inside and took the quickest of “navy” (?) showers to conserve water. For only the second night of the trip, the mosquitoes were vicious and thirsty; one woman nearby was found unconscious and pallid white, clutching an empty can of Off. Her husband had to rush her to the hospital in Whitehorse for a blood transfusion. He thinks she will survive.
DAY 50, July 10, Wednesday
We left the more or less abandoned RV park around 10, after I chatted with a retired couple who were travelling all over the continent for a year on their two Triumph motorcycles, hers a 900cc and his a 1900cc. Back in the day I had a 500cc Triumph on which—being the idiot an 18 year old can be—I hit 118 mph on what at that speed was an undulating road to the beach. It’s a true wonder I’m here writing to myself today. Anyway, the couple were on quite the adventure heading toward Alaska. There is certainly a spectrum of adventuring.
The day was bright and sunny, with blue skies and lovely cumulus clouds. Forested mountains were everywhere for much of the 361 miles, meaning curvy roads often with no lines, sometimes running beside rivers and streams. We passed some cyclists, many of whom were probably doing the whole Alcan (1422 miles) based on the heavy gear they were carrying. We stopped for lunch one place and I talked to a guy, possibly German, who was soloing from Fairbanks to San Francisco. And did I mention it was hilly, sometimes with 7% grades? Like I said, there is certainly a spectrum of adventuring.
It was a long drive, but even so I was still impressed by how much wildlife we saw: four separate black bears, one of which started galumphing across the road (disguising his potential speed) after our discourteous dogs started barking at him with the windows down. We also saw several goats, a number of bison, and a small group of caribou.
Also along this band of highway through the wilderness, there are many gravel and dirt sections, and the dust is unrelenting. On two occasions now an oncoming truck created so much dust that I had to hit the brakes because of a dust whiteout so bad that I couldn’t see 20 feet in front of me. A truck has already given us one windshield peck, an almost inevitable occurrence, especially given that these truckers wear extremely heavy boots. At Watson Lake (a very small town) we both concluded that we had had enough dust and, beautiful as the scenery is, we just would not want to live here if only because of all the dirt and dust. In that vein, we have noted more than a couple of for sale establishments and even a few more abandoned buildings and failed, overgrown RV parks.
We arrived around 7 at our destination, the Toad River RV park, and it was one of the two or three best private parks we’ve had—a good café, excellent bathrooms, decent separation between sites, and amenities. Especially important to us after seven weeks on the road, it even had on-site dumping, allowing us to not only empty our grey and black tanks after three days of dry camping, but also to actually clean the toilet, after which we took long showers. Val prefers the known cleanliness of the camper shower, but here with clean, free, and close-by showers she had her first campground shower. Obviously we use disposable latex gloves for all the plumbing work, if just for the psychological benefit.
But the dust. We discovered that the rear window had jarred loose and slid open, a complaint about Casitas Val had seen that others had made. Today was perhaps the dustiest day we’ve experienced, and so the window came open along the way, and dirt and dust were all over my bed and on other surfaces. Val did the best she could to clean. She was so unhappy; the Casita is her baby. But it may require Stanley Steamer when we get home.
When I was a little boy and my Mom and I were visiting with my grandparents and other relatives in rural North Carolina on all those Sunday afternoons, I would ride my horse along the dirt road by their house and all around the dirt yard. This noble steed was a broom handle or more likely a tobacco stick (for hanging tobacco to be cured in a heated tobacco barn) with a stuffed sock tied to the front end, with little eyes drawn on. Probably even some kind of tail at the other end. I’m pretty sure I wore a cowboy hat and a six-shooter. A big part of making it real was creating as much dust as you could by having the tail end of the stick trailing through the dirt as you ran around, just like all the dust the TV cowboys made as their horses galloped across the plains. It’s a happy little memory. But now I’m having second thoughts about the dust. So there you go—the old man detests it, the little boy revels in it. Ain’t life grand?
DAY 51, July 11, Thursday
I think I could have spent another night at this pleasant campground, especially since we really need to wash clothes and dust-soaked sheets and cover. But Val was ready to move on, and I didn’t object so we got on the highway at about our standard departure time of 10-1030. I had breakfast at the café—very good—but Val passed, knowing the cinnamon bun place we stopped at on the way up was just 50 or so miles down the road. So we stopped again.
It was another pretty, smokeless day, not too cold, not too hot. I’m not sure what laws of motion are at work here, but somehow we drove almost exactly the same distance we’ve done for the previous three days—right at 350 miles. It’s not that we are setting out each morning to drive 350 or so miles. But we stop where there is a convenient or at least acceptable place to stay, coupled with the fact that we don’t want to stop too early if we are dry camping. It’s been a little warm to build campfires, and sometimes it’s been a little buggy. Still, we are probably spending too much time in the camper. Also, all this ridiculous writing is beginning to wear me out.
Essentially the highway, running through wilderness and the Northern Rockies, is an enormous technology desert, with no service of any kind, since the car’s signal is AT&T, as is Val’s phone. But other providers wouldn’t be any better, and certainly not mine, little C-Spire, which is fine for Hattiesburg but less so elsewhere, and really bad internationally, including Canada. I will probably switch when we get back. Anyway, RV private parks and towns are little oases in this desert, and then we can use the park’s or the car’s wi-fi. Today in Fort Nelson we tried to get reservations for Jasper NP, but despite over 1200 sites at three or four campgrounds, they were booked solid. I really thought that beginning Sunday night they would have an opening, but no, at least as of now. So we may miss Jasper this time, though we had a great little site in their Pocahontas campground on the way up. Our bigger concern is Glacier, which does offer several sites on a first come, first served basis. On shorter trips, say a month or less, it makes sense to plot out an itinerary with reservations for the major places made six or more months ahead, and just do what it takes to make sure you get there that day. But on a trip this long, projecting where you will be many weeks in advance is very hard, and possibly even undesirable. Plans can change.
We are outside Fort St. John, British Columbia, a city of 27,000, in Charlie Lake Provincial Park. The nicely wooded park itself is just fine, like most of the provincial parks, presuming you don’t need hook-up of any kind. But we had emptied our tanks and watered-up the day before, so we should be good for up to four days of dry camping. I had an enjoyable talk with a fellow camper about my age who was from Vancouver, who had been travelling in the Yukon. I do thoroughly enjoy hearing what others are doing and have done. He is travelling alone by car, sleeping in the car and occasional lodges or motels.
DAY 52, July 12, Friday
Being close to town, we had a cell signal and so the tech wizard of the family—that would not be me—checked Jasper one more time for vacancies. Finding none, we plotted a beeline for Glacier, bypassing the mountainous, gorgeous Banff-to-Jasper route we took going up. Based on the campgrounds in and around Glacier that Val found, we ultimately decided to try to get to Glacier Sunday afternoon and chose a guaranteed four nights at a private RV park in Coram, about seven miles from the West entrance. It just seemed easier than hoping to get a first come, first served, no hook-up site at Apgar, inside the park. I hope we can spend another day or two there, since we also love Kalispell, Whitefish, and surrounding area.
We drove 315 miles today, and are in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Whitecourt, Alberta, along with half a dozen or so other rigs. We got here about 730, having crossed a time zone and lost an hour. You can’t just count on a place being at exactly the number of miles you want to go, so we went a little farther today, hoping to get to the Glacier area at a reasonable time on Sunday afternoon.
We crossed from British Columbia into Alberta, and gradually the whole ecosystem changed, from more mountainous, river-laced terrain to the open prairie, and the town of Grand Prairie is well named. The countryside is appealing and relatively flat, and the jewels in the crown this time of year are undoubtedly the stunning canola fields that I came to love so much in and around Kalispell. It is beyond question the brightest, most beautiful expanse of yellow you will ever see, acre upon acre.
The highway—our first four lane highway in weeks—varied from very good to below average. A consequence of the latter was a popped rivet above the microwave. We brought drill and rivet-gun for this near-inevitability, and maybe we can get the ladder out soon and repair it.